I love to watch the curious and continuously evolving between names and their meanings. Many parents dream like that namespace, then go digging for a traditional source to give the name additional roots. Some even invent a meaning, just as they have invented the name. Namipedia receives many observations of brand new names with "meanings" as "wanted-for the child," "Angel of God" and "beautiful Princess."
Once in a while-namers child will go further, claiming the definition you just created as the reason for the name. I just learned a good word for a form of this: Cortical. An acronym is a word formed from the initials of a phrase, such as laser (Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of radiation). A Cortical is an acronym for false, after-the-fact.Take the letters in a Word, find a suitable sentence where words begin with those letters and call it a source. for example, the golf of speech is mistakenly said to come from "gentlemen, ladies forbidden."
World namespace, Mabel. In the sitcom 1990s Mad About You, girl, the main character was named Mabel after a proverb of his grandmother, "mothers in always brings extra love."Sorry that sitcom writers, but I'm not buying it definitely name retro-hipster, cute, came first, and the catch phrase clumsy, unlikely was built on it.In fact, I picture a roomful of writers acronymic "origins" brainstorming to suitable names.
I'm starting to see more and more stories to name backronymic in real life, too. you'll hear, for example, that Lyla comes from "Love You lots, always."Is a gentle tale to tell your child his name, but source? this distinction rests solely with a name like iLy, where the acronym actually came first.
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